
Originally Posted by
Midfrew
Let me declare an interest straight up: an NZ breeder, owner and I love racing. Winning is everything! Also member NZ Breeders Assn.
Why is it that a culture has been created in Australia in the last 20 years (i.e. thanks to Johnnie Howard and the current one paying lump sums of $5k here and $10k there to buy votes, to bred babies, to buy houses, to fund dodgy insulation schemes (that killed people without any real questioning)) etc etc that someone else has to pay for other people's bad decisions. It is a fundamental flaw to these aspects of this whole report - someone else should pay! Why does anyone other than a breeder owe the breeders a living? If breeders want a subsidy scheme to fund big studs and stallion owners then they should pay. But hey 'no', the Panel go to the refuge of fools and scoundrels and say "tax" someone, in this case imports and registrations from imported semen. Oh dear is this the best we can do?
Some questions as starters for 10:
G'day John, by way of a distinction have replied in bold.
1. Why tax owners to fund breeders and big studs and stallion owners?
The studs are effectively being taxed too though that will be passed onto the breeders (see the proposed additional fees per chilled semen transport ex NZ as well as increased registration fees for the resultant foals...I make it another $725 per colt for every one that is produced by imported semen...be it fresh chilled or frozen)
2. If the imported product meets the market needs why not buy it?
I don't disagree with this point however as I tried to underline to my friend The Big Mile, the justification for doing so is not that going 4yo+ horses from NZ are the equivalent of Oz bred yearlings being sold through the sales in AUS). The fact is the two are poles apart in terms of age, eligibilities and so comparitive earning capacity. Those who will shop at an APG sale are there for significantly different reasons to those who just want a horse to race on the average Saturday night at Menangle. eg. I'm sure that Mark Purdon didn't show up to buy Mr. Nickel & Fly Like An Eagle as yearlings with those intentions in mind.
3. The scheme will increase stallion fees. Every subsidy does. True or false? True
4. The scheme will increase the use of poor stallions (people will use credits to bred to the local stallion that should not be in the gene pool) will it not? True again, though for the most part I wouldn't say poor, rather lesser sires than would otherwise have been used.
5. Are there too many stallions in Australia at 330+?
Yes, no doubt, however if you look at the majority of them they'd have been lucky to cover 20 mares and many of those were done for free.
The breed to race culture over here will always see to it that there are a lot of homebreds being produced in such fashion and I doubt that'll change very much in the future.
What we need to focus on more, what we really need to do, what me must do is produce a very different article... our own home-grown sires by the best of the current shuttle sires.
6. Is not $16 million net return to studs extraordinarily poor for an industry in which everyone has to survive? Definitely, especially when you consider how much of that is then repatriated to US/CAN based syndicates.
How can the studs envigorate the gene pool at this level. They can't, at least not under their own banner. (see previous point)
Congratulations to the few far-sighted folks who are taking risks with the best imported bloodstock. They deserve to make a living and a return. Indeed. Three Cheers!
Just so that no one is in any doubt I believe that the punter if KING. From the punter comes the gold. The gold comes from competitive evenly matched drug free racing. Everyone else enters this industry with their eyes wide open, and if not they deserve everything that happens to them and no one owes them a cent.
The more I think about it the less comfortable I am with the broodmare credits aspect. Firstly because if I wanted access to handouts then I'd be lining up at the Matthew Talbot Hostel Soup Kitchen every night...and secondly, because I really doubt it will see more foals produced. Rather, all it will do is somewhat offset the Breeder's costs of producing to the current levels.
Ultimately what will definitely drive demand for horses, what has always & will always drive demand are owners willing to shell out their hard earned to have them trained...and that, in turn drives the entire breeding machine.
It's all well and good to produce more foals but if at the end of the process there is no bastard there that is willing to take them on...then there's no point.
John Mooney